Sawsan Ahmed Ali, Abhijit Suboyin and Hadi Bel Haj
Energy is not a traditional commodity where low prices is always good news! It might be good for some, but definitely, not the case for many. Energy resources including, fossil fuels and renewables, have a significant impact on our day to day activities and they have been prime contributors to our lives retention, advancements and upheaval of the world economy at large. As a result, oil has not only played the role of the master commodity on a financial and economical level, but has also extended its supreme impact to the social, sociopolitical and geopolitical aspects of the modern world. However, it is peculiar to note that even with this significance, the oil industry has been experiencing various economic shocks over the past decades. Such shocks have directly been reflected in oil price fluctuations within a dynamic and short timeframe. With the OPEC and non-OPEC production fluctuations against consistent economic growth, worldwide geopolitical conflicts and the ongoing competition between conventional and unconventional oil reserves, the swings in oil prices have become a phenomenon which is worth understanding and analyzing in order to prospect its future trends on the long run. The key question to examine is whether the recently experienced battle between production rate and oil prices will continue affecting the global market over the coming years. This study explores various factors formulating the volatile behavior of oil prices and links the contemporary situations to the historical oil price spikes and trends related to specific events that we know and several others hidden beneath.
One of the main key drives for the current oil crisis is presumed to be the active production of unconventional oil which poses a significant threat to conventional oil producers and has extended its impact to both political and economic levels. Furthermore, the future of conventional oil reserves is analyzed in depth based on generated empirical models prospecting the future profiles of various extractable ultimate recoverable (EUR) scenarios while considering external factors such as socio-political and economic growth. The decline rate of conventional oil reserves productivity is expected to be prominent over the next decades as depicted by this study. This further supports our conclusion that the current positive supply oil price shock and the active emergence of unconventional oil will lead to a disruption in the future reliance and usage of conventional oil.
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Journal of Global Economics received 1931 citations as per Google Scholar report